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The Favorite - by Lucinda Watson (Paperback)

The Favorite - by  Lucinda Watson (Paperback) - 1 of 1
$10.99 sale price when purchased online
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About this item

Highlights

  • The Favorite is, in Cig Harvey's words, "an arrow to the heart.
  • Author(s): Lucinda Watson
  • 84 Pages
  • Poetry, Subjects & Themes

Description



Book Synopsis



The Favorite is, in Cig Harvey's words, "an arrow to the heart." Its sixty-four poems are gently shaped into three parts as Watson leads readers into her childhood's world of social privilege, recognizes the psychological costs inhabitants pay, and demonstrates a wide and wonderful range of reactions.

Most of the fifteen poems in Part I are based on childhood memories. Four sisters ride uncomfortably in the back seat of the big car, ordered not to wrinkle their Sunday dresses, while their brother "rides shotgun and wears what he wants." A girl manages to paddle around in an old canoe, but her sense of freedom comes from keeping herself hidden, or pretending she's Pocahantas. Gender norms strongly favor the family's only boy, and its powerful, charismatic father, whose presence inspires awe and fear, compliance and rebellion. Straight women, passive women, pretty and well-dressed women--enjoy, question, and are damaged by their privilege. In "Another Hurricane Coming," for example, we understand what's lost when a mother no longer wants her children to "feel the wind." The fifteen poems in Part II stretch the threads first spun in childhood into adolescence, by turns angry, loving, subtle and compassionate. "When I Think of My Mother, I See a Closed Door," ends the section appropriately.

Part III is longer-- its voice generally older, more accepting, more free in its metaphors, and
marked by a wonderfully wry sense of humor. As Richard Blanco says, "Watson tenderly, yet
unabashedly, speaks to the allure and trappings of womanhood as she traces its arc from the innocent
expectations of a girl, to the fear of a teenager forced to conform, to a fully actuated woman ... self-aware and fully alive with all her past and her future, her pain and healing, her losses and her newfound hopes."



Review Quotes




Lucinda Watson's poems are upsetting in the way that powerful poetry always is: The images are sensuous and provocative, but also suggestive of pain and regret. A charmed, privileged life--deconstructed.

David Ignatius, columnist for the Washington Post and author of The Paladin


Poetry as memoir and memoir as poetry-Lucinda Watson brings both together to take us with her on a truly captivating life journey.

Peter Andreas, Brown University, author of Killer High: A History of War in Six Drugs


Through poems that are as precise they are free-wheeling, as reserved as they are unapologetic, as private as they are confessional and public, The Favorite recasts the archetypal hero's journey as a heroine's journey. Watson tenderly, yet unabashedly, speaks to the allure and trappings of womanhood as she traces its arc from the innocent expectations of a girl, to the fear of a teenager forced to conform, ... to a fully actuated woman who is self-aware and fully alive with all her past and her future, her pain and healing, her losses and her newfound hopes.

Richard Blanco, Presidential Inaugural Poet, 2013, author of How to Love a Country


The Favorite is an arrow to the heart.

Cig Harvey, internationally acclaimed photographer, author of You An Orchestra You A Bomb


Lucinda Watson's engrossing collection... is a sweeping exploration of what it is to be a daughter, a lover, and a woman. Watson's potent, often witty insights are spun through with unexpected imagery. One important thread is her private rebellion and deepening self-awareness as she explores her relationship with her powerful father. These are skillfully wrought, deeply insightful poems of humanity, sexuality and loss.

Brett Hall Jones, Director of the Community of Writers at Squaw Valley


Lucinda Watson's The Favorite is a remarkable debut collection. These finely crafted poems begin with a passionate and, at times, uncomfortable exploration of family relationships. There is privilege, travel--and the frequent trips she takes as a child continue literally and metaphorically into adulthood, motherhood and difficult relationships. Every poem seems effortless with graceful lines, affectionate tones, and lucid eloquence. The illumination at the center of even the darkest poems transcends loss ... and celebrates the wonder and reward of being human.

Kevin Pilkington, Sarah Lawrence College, author of The Unemployed Man Who Became a Tree


Finding The Favorite is like opening a secret journal lush with language that evokes our own lost memories....

Joyce Tenneson, Lifetime Achievement winner, Professional Photographers of America


Watson's narrative voice is deceptively simple, its underlying power achieved through such devices as well-calculated line endings that ... enact the poem's movement, as when halting at a "rest stop." ... Prose poems overflow their containers, giving a sense of pressured speech.

Kirkus Review


Watson's poetry packs tragic punches, and yet is leavened with moments of good humor, exquisite beauty and primal desire. ... [She] holds ... broken things together in her hands, helping us see their original shape and how they've changed. She wraps her words around moments of beauty, however elusive they might be.

Aarik Danielsen, The Columbia Daily Tribune



Dimensions (Overall): 9.0 Inches (H) x 6.0 Inches (W) x .23 Inches (D)
Weight: .36 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 84
Genre: Poetry
Sub-Genre: Subjects & Themes
Publisher: Golden Antelope Press
Theme: Family
Format: Paperback
Author: Lucinda Watson
Language: English
Street Date: October 5, 2020
TCIN: 1001354440
UPC: 9781936135950
Item Number (DPCI): 247-32-9807
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
If the item details above aren’t accurate or complete, we want to know about it.

Shipping details

Estimated ship dimensions: 0.23 inches length x 6 inches width x 9 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 0.36 pounds
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